Published October 14, 2020 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Ipsviciopsis elegans Tillyard 1922

Authors/Creators

Description

Ipsviciopsis elegans Tillyard, 1922

(Figs 33–52)

Ipsviciopsis elegans Tillyard, 1922: 464, text-fig. 85, plate liii, fig. 35; Tillyard, 1923: 484; Handlirsch, 1939: 9, 16; Evans, 1956: 248–249, figs 30B, 30E; Evans, 1963: 17–21, figs 1(c), plate 1B; Carpenter, 1992: 232; Jell, 2004: 45, 2 unnumbered figs.

Ipsvicia magna Tillyard, 1922: 465, text-fig. 86; Tillyard, 1923: 484; Handlirsch, 1939: 9, 16; Evans, 1956: 248; Evans, 1963: 17; Jell, 2004: 45. Syn. nov.

Material. Holotype and paratype tegmina GSQ178a, GSQ278a, holotype tegmen of Ipsviciopsis magna GSQ 93a, Denmark Hill. Fifty additional specimens: Dinmore: fragmentary body specimens: QMF60199 a/b–60201a/b, 60202, 60203; tegmina: QMF60204 a/b–60209a/b, QMF60210 – 60232, 60236a/b, 60237, ACCI.54, I.55a/b, I.56, I.57, I.58a/b, I.65a/b, I.66a/b, I.172; clavi: QMF60233 –60235.

Description. Tegmen 13.2–16.2 mm long (holotype 13.3), 3.3–4.3 mm wide (holotype 3.4), length/width 3.8– 4.1; 1A about as long as PCu+1A, m-cua far distal to point of fusion of PCu and 1A; apex highly variable in shape and venation (Figs 40–52), with no two specimens the same; entirely darkly shaded.

Notes. Except for the apparent absence of dSc (? a preservation artefact), the tegmen of Ipsvicia langenbergensis, from the Late Triassic of Germany, at about four times longer than wide, and with simple tuberculate/punctate sculpture, a very broadly convex costal margin, a forwardly inclined costal fracture, and similar apical venation, more or less meets the diagnosis of Ipsviciopsis and is thus formally transferred as Ipsviciopsis langenbergensis (Barth, Ansorge et Brauckmann) comb. nov. It differs from the type species in having a very short PCu+1A, much shorter than 1A, and m-cua at about the same level as the point of fusion of PCu and 1A, rather than far distal to it.

Notes

Published as part of Lambkin, Kevin J., 2020, Revision of the Ipsviciidae of the Late Triassic of Queensland (Hemiptera Cicadomorpha: Scytinopteroidea), pp. 503-520 in Zootaxa 4860 (4) on page 513, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4860.4.2, http://zenodo.org/record/4414254

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Linked records

Additional details

Biodiversity

Collection code
ACCI
Scientific name authorship
Tillyard
Kingdom
Animalia
Phylum
Arthropoda
Order
Hemiptera
Genus
Ipsviciopsis
Species
elegans
Taxon rank
species
Type status
holotype
Taxonomic concept label
Ipsviciopsis elegans Tillyard, 1922 sec. Lambkin, 2020

References

  • Tillyard, R. J. (1922) Mesozoic insects of Queensland. No. 9. Orthoptera, and additions to the Protorthoptera, Odonata, Hemiptera and Planipennia. Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales, 47, 447 - 470. [https: // www. biodiversitylibrary. org / page / 35116952]
  • Tillyard, R. J. (1923) Mesozoic insects of Queensland. No. 10. Summary of the Upper Triassic insect fauna of Ipswich, Q. (With an appendix describing new Hemiptera and Planipennia). Proceedings of the Linnean Society of New South Wales, 48, 481 - 498. [https: // www. biodiversitylibrary. org / page / 35067038]
  • Handlirsch, A. (1939) Neue Untersuchungen uber die fossilen Insekten mit Erganzungen und Nachtragen sowie Ausblicken auf phylogenetische, palaeogeographische und allgemein biologische Probleme. II. Teil. Annalen des naturhistorischen Museums in Wien, 49, 1 - 240. [https: // www. jstor. org / stable / pdf / 41768379. pdf]
  • Evans, J. W. (1956) Palaeozoic and Mesozoic Hemiptera (Insecta). Australian Journal of Zoology, 4, 165 - 158. https: // doi. org / 10.1071 / ZO 9560165
  • Evans, J. W. (1963) The systematic position of the Ipsviciidae (Upper Triassic Hemiptera) and some new Upper Permian and Middle Triassic Homoptera from Australia (Insecta). Journal of the Entomological Society of Queensland, 2, 17 - 23. https: // doi. org / 10.1111 / j. 1440 - 6055.1963. tb 00384. x
  • Carpenter, F. M. (1992) Superclass Hexapoda. In: Kaesler, R. L. (Ed.), Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology. Part R. Arthropoda 4. Vol. 3. The Geological Society of America Inc. Boulder, Colorado and The University of Kansas, and Lawrence, Kansas, pp. i-xxi + 1 - 277.
  • Jell, P. A. (2004) The fossil insects of Australia. Memoirs of the Queensland Museum, 50, 1 - 124. https: // doi. org / 10.1082 / j. 2204 - 1478.50 - 1.2004.2004.01